
Someday Soon doesn’t have the strong authorial voice or traditional Regency feel I associate with Wolf. It’s good though.Her father’s horrible will has forced Lady Alexandra Wilton to agree to marry her cousin, a man she thinks of as a brother. Then life throws another curve ball -- and another cousin -- at her, in the form of a previously unsuspected heir to her father’s title. (Yes, if you’re squicked out by cousins marrying, you don’t want to read this.) Alex is even more horrified at the thought of marrying Niall -- a barbaric Scotsman! He feeds his dogs at the table! He opens all the windows! -- but makes a deal with him that they’ll have an unconsummated marriage. Yeah, we all know how well that will work.I enjoyed the “opposites attract” elements of this story and the strong chemistry between the main characters. The English/Scottish conflict is well drawn, in a light way, and there’s an interesting mystery, though it unfortunately peters out at the end.I have no idea what the title of this book mean. The Scottish doctor in Dear Enemy is known for reciting a little poem about “someday soon,” so perhaps it’s a Scots thing?